Title: GP Time In Time Out Session
1GP Time In Time Out Session
2Case 1
- 69 ?
- T2 DM since 1995
- Alcohol excess (15 U/W)
- 74 Kg BMI32
- Ex-smoker, BP122/80
- HbA1c8.8, TC6.0
- GGT113
- Rx
- Bezalip MR 400mg OD
- Gliclazide 160mg BD
- MF MR 500 mg BD
- Amitriptyline 10mg OD
- Refuses Insulin
- Cannot tolerate statins
3South of Tyne Type 2 Diabetes Management
Guidelines 2010
4Acknowledgements
- Dr Colin Bradshaw GP and PBC Diabetes Lead South
Tyneside - Dr Henry Choi GP and PBC Diabetes Lead Sunderland
- Helen Ramsey Nurse Practitioner and PBC Diabetes
Lead Gateshead - Anne-Marie Bailey Prescribing Advisor NHS SoTW
Medicines Management Team - Dr Terence Aspray Care of the Elderly Consultant
City Hospitals Sunderland - Dr John Parr Consultant Diabetologist South
Tyneside District General Hospital - Dr Shahid Wahid Consultant Diabetologist South
Tyneside District General Hospital - Dr Rahul Nayar Consultant Diabetologist City
Hospital Sunderland - Dr Peter Carey Consultant Diabetologist City
Hospital Sunderland - Dr Kilimangalam Narayanan Consultant
Diabetologist Gateshead Health Foundation Trust - Gillian Johnson Regional Programme Manager NHS
Diabetes
5South of Tyne Guidance
6INCRETINS
- GLIPTINS
- Inhibit DPP IV
- Prolong action of native GLP 1
- GLP 1 MIMETICS
- Resistant to cleavage by DPP IV
- Half life prolonged
- Liraglutide vs Exenatide
- OD
- Better S/E profile
- Better homology to human GLP 1
7GLP-1 effects in humans
GLP-1 secreted upon the ingestion of food
5.Brain promotes satiety and reduces appetite4,5
2.a-cell suppresses postprandialglucagon
secretion1
3.Liver reduces hepatic glucose output2
1.?-cellenhances glucose-dependent insulin
secretion in the pancreas1
4.Stomach slows the rate of gastric emptying3
7
8- Gliptins are DPP IV inhibitors
- Prolong endogenous GLP 1 action
- GLP 1 therapies
- Resistant to endogenous DPP IV action
9Pioglitazone and Gliptins
- Dual therapy
- 2nd line instead of SU
- 2nd line instead of MF
- 3rd line would be insulin
- Triple therapy
- SoT guidelines
- 3rd line after MFSU instead of insulin
- 4th line would be insulin
10Pioglitazone or Gliptins?
- Pioglitazone preferable to gliptins if
- Marked insulin insensitivity is suspected
- Gliptin is contraindicated
- Poor response or intolerance to gliptin in the
past - Continue only if 0.5 drop in HbA1c at end of
6/12 - Do not use if C/I
11Where do we stand with Pioglitazone?
- Pros
- Insulin sensitiser
- Stabilise ß-cell function
- Minimal risk of hypos
- Cons
- Weight gain and fluid retention
- Delayed onset of action
- OR of 1.45 for fractures
- Use FRAX
- CV risk
- ? for pioglitazone
- Juurlink et.al. (BMJ 2009)
- Retrospective Cohort
- Death and HF less with pioglitazone
12Pioglitazone or Gliptins?
- Gliptins preferable to glitazones if
- Further weight gain would cause significant
problems - Glitazone is C/I
- Poor response to or did not tolerate glitazone in
the past - Not for initial monotherapy
- Continue only if 0.5 fall in HbA1c at 6 months
12
13Sitagliptin studies
Study Duration HbA1c Weight A/E
Add to MF Charbonnel Raz 24 vs P 30 vs P -0.65 -1.00 -0.6 similar -0.5 similar Similar Similar
Add to MF Nuack 52 vs glipizide -0.67 similar -0.8 cv gain Lower hypos
Add to pio Rosenstock 24 vs P -0.7 -0.6 similar Similar
Add to SU Hermansen 24 vs P -0.9 0.7 Similar
Add to SUMF Hermansen 24 vs P -0.6 0.7 Similar
14Which Gliptin?
Sitagliptin Vildagliptin Saxagliptin
HbA1c fall MF 0.65 1.00 1.10 0.5 0.72
Weight Neutral with no difference between agents Neutral with no difference between agents Neutral with no difference between agents
Hypos (cv placebo) Similar with no difference between agents Similar with no difference between agents Similar with no difference between agents
Dose 100 mg OD 50 mg BD MF 5 mg OD
Cost 28 days 37 for pio 33 32 (same for combination tablet) 32
15Cautions and S/E Gliptins
- C/I allergy, moderate to severe renal
impairment, pregnancy - S/E nausea, nasopharyngitis, SJ syndrome, hypos
with SU - For Vildagliptin
- Monitor LFTs
- Caution in CCF and in the elderly
- ?
16Where do we stand with gliptins?
- Pros
- Well tolerated
- Low risk of hypos
- Weight neutral
- Oral agent
- Promotion of ß-cell mass
- Licensed for second or third line Rx
- Sitagliptin can be used with insulin
- Cons
- May alter immune system
- ? risk of some infections
- Caution in renal impairment
- Effect on long term mortality/morbidity unclear
17Back to our case.
- 69 ?
- T2 DM since 1995
- Alcohol excess (15 U/W)
- 74 Kg BMI32
- Ex-smoker, BP122/80
- HbA1c8.8, TC6.0
- GGT113
- Rx
- Bezalip MR 400mg OD
- Gliclazide 160mg BD
- MF MR 500 mg BD
- Amitriptyline 10mg OD
- Refuses Insulin
- Cannot tolerate statins
18Back to our case
- GLYCAEMIC CONTROL
- Third line oral agent
- GLIPTIN
- GLITAZONE
- ACARBOSE
- GLP 1 analogues
- LIPID PROFILE
- Have we achieved all we can?
- Further lifestyle measures?
- Improved HbA1cbetter CV risk
19GLP 1 mimetics/analogues
- Add to metformin and SU where insulin would be
considered as the next option if - - BMI35 with problems associated with high weight
- Inadequate glucose control
- BMIlt35 and insulin unacceptable or weight loss
would benefit other co-morbidities - Continue only if 1 HbA1c fall and 3 loss in
weight at 6 months - Currently not licensed for use with insulin
- Liraglutide licensed for use with pioglitazone
19
20Liraglutide versus Exenatide (1)
- Liraglutide effect and action in diabetes LEAD
trial 6 - Open label, MN, parallel group trial
- 26 weeks
- 464 patients with T2DM on MF and/or SU with HbA1c
7-11 and BMI45 - Randomised to receive liraglutide 1.8mg OD or
exenatide 10 mcg BD
21Liraglutide versus Exenatide (2)
Liraglutide Exenatide
Change in HbA1c plt0.0001 - 1.1 - 0.8
Change in body weight NS - 3.24 - 2.87
achieving HbA1clt7.0 p0.0015 54 43
S/E nausea lt10 after 5 weeks 10 at 26 weeks
22ABCD Exenatide AuditPresented at DUK, Dr Ryder
- 6717 patients, 3054 data complete
- Data collected over 1 year
- HbA1c drop 9.41 ? 8.65 (1.00)
- Weight loss 114 ? 109 (5-10 kgs)
- S/E
- 28 had GI S/E
- 7.2 stopped Rx
- 7 cases of pancreatitis (0.18)
23Liraglutide NICE TA-2010
- TRIPLE THERAPY
- Indications as before
- DUAL THERAPY
- With MF or SU
- Additional SU/MF not tolerated/CI AND
- Additional glitazone/gliptin not tolerated/CI
- 1.8 mg not recommended
24Statins in T2 DM
- JBS2 SIGN, NICE
- All gt40 yrs grade A
- 18-39 yrs with associated problems
- Evidence
- CARDS, ASCOT, HPS
- Strong evidence in T2DM
- 1 mmol/l ? 21 RR
Simvastatin 40 mg
Simvastatin 80 mg
Atorvastatin 80 mg OR Simvastatin 80 mg
Ezetimibe 10 mg
Age 10 yr risk NNT
30 1.1 364
40 2.5 160
50 5.7 70
70 23 17
25Statins in T1 DM
- JBS2 SIGN, NICE
- All gt40 yrs grade B
- 18-39 yrs with associated problems
- Evidence
- CARDS, ASCOT, HPS
- Less strong evidence
- 1 mmol/l ? same ? in events ns
CONCLUSION In younger patients with type 1 DM
absolute risk is low but risk is higher
compared to age matched people without DM
Age 10 yr risk NNT
20-29 0.24 1667
30-39 0.87 460
40-49 5.28 76
60-69 28.3 14
26Aspirin as Primary Prevention in DM
- Over the age of 50
- On anti-HT with BPlt145/90 OR
- Strong family h/o premature IHD OR
- CV risk score 20 over 10 years using UKPDS
risk engine
27Case 2
- 71 ?
- T2 DM since 2008
- IHD 1989
- HT 1988
- BMI28
- Macroproteinuria
- eGFR68
- TC2.7
- Rx
- Lisinopril 40mg OD
- Irbesartan 300 mg OD
- Atenolol 50mg OD
- BDZ 2.5mg OD
- Adalat retard 90mg OD
- Simvastatin 10mg OD
- What other info do you want?
- What are the priorities in management?
28Diabetic NephropathyBurden of Illness
- Incidence
- Diabetic nephropathy develops in around 25 of
patients with type 2 diabetes - People with diabetes account for 25 of those
entering renal replacement therapy - Mortality
- Microalbuminuria indicates a substantially
increased mortality risk in patients with type 2
diabetes - Patients with type 2 diabetes and high levels of
albumin have a mortality rate 148 higher than
control.
British Diabetic Association Report, April
1997. Jarrett RJ, et al. Diabetic Med 1984 (1)
17-19.
29CVD Mortality by Urinary Protein Excretion in
Type 2 Diabetes
1.0
0.9
Survival curves for CVD mortality
A
0.8
B
0.7
0.6
C
Overall plt0.001
0.5
0
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
Months
U-Prot urinary protein concentration
Miettinen H et al. Stroke. 1996 27 20332039.
30Micro and macroalbuminuria
- Microalbuminuria
- (31-299 mg/day)
- ACR gt2.5 in men
- ACRgt3.5 in women
- Macroalbuminuria
- gt300 mg/24 hour
- Exercise
- Pregnancy
- Poor sugar control
- CCF
- Hypertension
- UTI
31Albuminuria
- Marker for CV disease and nephropathy
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34Natural History of Type 2 Diabetic Nephropathy
Clinical type 2 diabetes
Functional changes
Structural changes
Rising blood pressure
Microalbuminuria
Proteinuria
Rising serum creatinine levels
End-stage renal disease
Cardiovascular death
Onset of diabetes
2
5
10
20
30
Years
Renal haemodynamics altered, glomerular
hyperfiltration Glomerular basement membrane
thickening ?, mesangial expansion ?,
microvascular changes /-
35Strategies to prevent progression of diabetic
nephropathy
- Extremely good BP control ? also ? UAER
- lt130/75 in type 1
- lt140/80 in type 2
- Individualise target
- Good glycaemic control
- ACEI/ARB but be prepared to use multiple agents
- CV risk reduction to reduce mortality
36Slower Decline in Renal Function with Lower
Blood Pressure Goals
Results of studies ³ 3 years in patients with
type 2 diabetic nephropathy
Bakris GL. Diabetes Res 1998 39(suppl) S35-S42.
37What about primary prevention?
- Good glycaemic control
- DCCT 2.2 vs 3.4 per year developed µalb
- UKPDS 23 vs 34 had µalb at 12 yrs
- But does not abolish it
- Use of RAS inhibitors
- Losartan, candesartan, enalapril
- Unable to reduce µalb over 5 yrs
38Back to our case......
- Consider other causes of proteinuria
- Refer to renal team if
- e-GFRlt30 OR
- If e-GFR falls by gt 4 ml/min/year
- CV risk reduction
- Aspirin, Simvastatin to 40 mg
- Individualise BP target
- Achieve target HbA1c
- Ensure digital retinal screening is up to date
39Case 3
- 65 ?
- T2 DM 2001
- HT
- BMI30.4, Xsmoker
- HbA1c10.5
- TC4.6
- ACR Normal
- Rx
- Glimiperide 4 mg OD
- Glucophage SR 2 g OD
- What next?
- Not keen on insulin
40Case 4
- 87 ? very active
- T2 DM 1992
- HT
- Macroproteinuria
- Impaired vision
- BMI26.4, BP182/80
- HbA1c6.9
- Rx
- MF 3 gm/day
- Gliclazide 320 mg/day
- Perindopril 8mg OD
- Irbesartan 300mg OD
41Case 4 continued
- 06/2007 eGFR 36 so MF stopped
- 08/07 HbA1c 9.8 so pio started
- 06/08 HbA1c 7.9 but BMI ? 29.1 and BP? 176/100
- 10/2010 pio stopped and MF re-started as eGFR 40
- Now HbA1c 8, 146/56, eGFR 43
- Rx
- Gliclazide 320, MF 500
- Perindopril, irbesartan
- Frusemide 40, amlodipine 5
- Bisoprolol 5
- What could have been done different?
- What now?
42Case 5
- 65 ?
- T2 DM 2004
- HT
- NAFLD
- BMI33, BP 140/80
- HbA1c11.1
- Rx
- MF 3 gm
- Gliclazide 320 mg
- Ramipril 5 mg
- Simvastatin 40 mg
- What are the options?
43Case 6
- 61 ?
- T2 DM 2000
- HT, OA
- Smoker
- BMI47.2, BP140/90
- HbA1c7.9, TC5.9
- Rx
- Aspirin, perindopril
- Atenolol, frusemide
- Orlistat trial X
- Novomix 30 52 BD
- MF 2 gm/day
- Can we do anything to help her lose weight?
44Case 6 continued
- Role of insulin sensitisers
- Pioglitazone added in Feb 2010
HbA1c BMI Insulin dose
2/2010 7.9 47.2 104
7/2010 7.4 47 64
3/2011 5.9 43 44 ? 32
45Drug Cost for 28 days
Glucophage SR 1000 4.26 (67p for 850mg)
Sitagliptin 100 33.26
Pioglitazone 45 36.96
Gliclazide 320 4.24
Insulin glargine 1500 units 39.00
Exenatide 10 mcg 68.24 (78.48 for Liraglutide)
DIABETES DRUG COSTS ACROSS SOUTH OF TYNE 6.9
million 7.2